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Volunteer Teaching in Kenya

Volunteer Teaching in Kenya

Volunteers will live and work in the beautiful Shimoni Archipelago, off the coast of the Indian Ocean on the border with Tanzania, a world class location for dolphins as well as other wildlife.
Operator rating 9.7/10 from 7 trip reviews
  View Itinerary | Reviews (7) | Enquire About This Trip  make an enquiry
Price: GBP £925 per person
Currency Price: ZAR R13,206 /person estimated
Type: Volunteer Project
Duration: 14 days
Country: Kenya
Accommodation: Mixed
Activities: Volunteer Project
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Itinerary

Volunteer Teaching in Kenya

What Difference Does This Project Make?
Volunteers will have the opportunity to become involved in local community development projects, including teaching English as a foreign language and sustainable tourism programmes. Full training is provided by ours full time education staff allowing volunteers a hands on and invaluable contribution to the development of these warm and welcoming communities. Volunteers can also choose to combine this project with other programs in the area including our dolphin research project and primate research project.

Highlights
Integrating deeply with the local community and learning some Swahili, English language teaching techniques and an intro to TEFL (teach English as a foreign language) certification, Camping out under the African stars; living on an African island; having the chance to see dolphins and whales; experiencing the amazing mega-fauna of the island that includes whale sharks and manta rays (seasonal), snorkelling some of Kenya’s finest coral reefs, seeing primates and making a real difference to these vital community development projects.

Location
Shimoni is a peninsula located next to the Kisite-Mpunguti Marine Protected Area, which lies at the tip of the Pemba Channel. With scattered islands covered by coastal forest, mangroves, rocky shores, sandy bays and fringed by coral reefs, Shimoni is a tropical haven and divers’ paradise. Volunteers may be located at our main base in Mkwiro on Wasini Island, situated alongside the famous Kisite National Marine Park or at our satellite base in Shimoni home to globally important coastal forest.

Field Conditions
Accommodation is in shared dormitories. Mkwiro base has a large communal banda where volunteers can eat, conduct training, plan lessons and relax after their teaching within the local community; there is limited The base electricity, powered by solar panel and backed up by a generator. Volunteers can wash either in the ocean or using bucket-style showers on the base. Shimoni base has mains power and showers. You will be living with different volunteer teams either from the expedition or from volunteers choosing to work on the dolphin or colobus projects. This is a great way to learn more about what we do in the area and you will also have the opportunity to stop in to see other projects at work. Both bases offer beautiful views of the Wasini channel. Wholesome and varied meals will be cooked on a rotational basis.

Project Life
You will spend most of your time teaching children English and assisting the community with sustainable development initiatives. Occasionally you may teach adults and local orphans.

We run multiple programs in this area and you will be living with volunteers who may be working on our dolphin or monkey research projects. This is a great way to learn more about what we do in the area and you may also have the opportunity to stop in to see other projects at work.

What's Included
Pre-departure support and discounted services
24-hour emergency phone
Airport pick-up (unless otherwise stated)
Arrival orientation
Long term experienced staff
Safe and basic accommodations (usually shared)
All meals (unless otherwise stated in field manuals)
Welcome meeting
Location orientation
All necessary project training by experienced staff
All necessary project equipment and materials
24-hour in-country support
Tour of the village
Introduction to teaching
Training and teaching materials

What's Not Included
Flights
Medical and travel insurance
Visa costs
Personal kit
Additional drinks and gratuities
Extra local excursions
International and domestic airport taxes

Tour Operator Reviews (7) about reviews
1 
Client: Liz Toscano - from Australia
Trip: Volunteer with Colobus Monkeys in Kenya
Rating:
rating 10/10
Comment: I found this through The Africa Guide website after filtering through many options and I'm supremely glad I did.

It was an experience like no other. It gave me the opportunity to experience a wonderful little village as only a local would and take part in volunteer work with a legitimate and extremely important long term goal.

Our interactions with the locals were so educational and inspiring and getting that chance to work out in the elements spotting wildlife and completing forest surveys was challenging and completely wonderful.

If you're the kind of person that can weather trivial things like cold showers, long walks and a bit of dirt in order to have an authentic African experience then this is perfect. I'm already looking into the next trip.

10/10; Absolutely the best time!
 
2 
Client: Kaye Greenhalgh - from Australia
Trip: Volunteer in an Orphanage in Cape Town
Rating:
rating 10/10
Comment: We had a very positive experience in Africa and would love to go back at some stage.
 
3 
Client: Maarten Van Deun - from Belgium
Trip: South Africa Conservation Internship
Rating:
rating 10/10
Comment: I had a very good experience on this volunteer project. The organisor is absolutely reliable, well organised, and their staff are very professional (field as well as head-offices).

Probably one of the best volunteer organisations out there.
 
4 
Client: Huon McGifford - from Australia
Trip: currently unavailable
Rating:
rating 8/10
Comment: Pre-Departure:
The trip notes provided were really helpful but there is one incredibly key thing that needs to be fixed up. In the notes girls are advised to cover their shoulders and chest while on their volunteer placements in Swaziland. Swaziland however, culturally does not accept women having their thighs out and this is so important to know before you get there because trust me, it’s hot there in jeans, but you CANNOT wear shorts to your placement as a girl. Swazi’s could not care less if you had a tube top on , as in it’s fine to wear your chest and shoulders out, but your thighs are a definite no no. So girls need to know to pack light weight trousers or ¾ length pants. It is also important to have at least one skirt that goes past your knees or alternatively a sarong because it is needed for the tour you do of the local area on your first day. Boys are pretty much fine to wear whatever they want.

Arrival:
On arrival All Out are so helpful and amazing, actually they are the whole time you are in Africa but they are a definite comfort when you first arrive. I think it’s important to list on the trip notes that Lidwala Lodge is where you will be staying the whole time you’re in Swaziland, this way people arriving early will know that’s the best place to book, rather than just an option.
Lidwala is amazing. There are washing facilities and good internet, happy people and a great cooking roster. This was all included on the trip notes, it was so helpful to know in advance too, well done and thanks!

The Trip:
What to say? The children that I worked with at the Neighbourhood Care Points (NCP’s) were crazy, beautiful, loving, lovely and intelligent. There is an unfortunate and instant barrier because of the language gap between the volunteers and the children but you quickly pick up the appropriate Siswati words to deal with the children and the demands they place on you. They are the most energetic little things you’ll ever met and at the end of every day you’re definitely worn out. At my NCP there were usually 60-65 children aged between 2 and 16, with varying levels of education and some with disabilities both physical and mental. The NCP’s are taxing physically and mentally but you leave happy, if exhausted, every day. And on days with nice weather there is always the Royal Swazi Spa to calm ones nerves.

Swaziland itself is a beautiful country with gorgeous mountains and scenery. At the lodge there are monkeys running all around and a national treasure, Sheba’s Breast (a mountain), behind which you can climb in a couple of hours. There are 3 wildlife parks in Swaziland, one quite close to where the volunteers stay. However, Hlane, which is a giant trek by public transport away, is well worth the trip because you can do an amazing Rhino walk there and get up really close to wild animals. It’s well worth it! Another very cool thing volunteers can do is a quad biking tour which goes basically all day and includes target shooting and a brai (BBQ) at a different backpackers. The backpackers is a converted cow barn and it’s amazing, the ex feeding trough is now a lap pool and the milking stations have been turned into a bar and bar stools.

The Kruger Safari happens in the first week that you arrive in Swaziland. It is amazing though, I must admit I would have rathered have had two weeks volunteering then have gone to Kruger. While you’re in Kruger you do begin wondering what your placement will be like and then once you’re there in Swaziland volunteering you’re kinda wishing you could go back to Kruger where you get looked after. But both Kruger and volunteering are good, don’t get me wrong!

The Mozambique trip, to Tofo, is spectacular. It’s the best holiday you could ever wish for. Swimming with whale sharks is terrifying but amazing, it’s one of the best experiences you could ever have, ever. We also experienced a sea kayaking adventure to a quite remote island, which was amazing and enlightening. We learnt about life on the island and met the chief and had freshly caught crabs for lunch! Yum!

Overall the whole trip was an amazing experience. Volunteering was probably the best part. It can feel quite hard and stressful while you’re there with the children, and a bit like you’ve been dropped in the deep end, so to speak, but it’s the thing you miss most when you get home. You form such an attachment to your students. I think the sponsorship program is amazing and incredibly valuable.
 
5 
Client: Janet Magnuson - from Canada
Trip: Marine Conservation & Research in Seychelles
Rating:
rating 10/10
Comment: my time in the Seychelles.... what can i say, it was a fasinating experience.

Learning the coral (all 47 in latin), diving 5 days a week. white beaches; blue, blue water; lots of mega fauna; and the stars, so clear and bright.

The staff were wonderful, very patient and passionate about what they do. always willing to sit down and help or answer any questions you have.

The weather was hot, the water warm, the grass and trees green.

They have a sattelite camp on an island where giant tortoises live, after 5pm it is basically just you and a few others and the tortoises on this island, absolutly beautiful.

The diving in the Seychelles is one of the best i have dived. The vis is almost always 18-20 meters, with green and hawksbill turtles swimming past you. giant humphead parrot fish, the coral are bright and abundant.

Don't mistake me, you work hard also, you cook, clean, fill tanks, help where it is needed, but it is worth it. if you can do this trip, do it. 2 thumbs up.
 
6 
Client: Isolde Kamerman - from Australia
Trip: Wildlife conservation expedition in South Africa
Rating:
rating 10/10
Comment: I had a fantastic time in South Africa.

Not a day went past without seeing something amazing, however the highlight was seeing a female cheetah and her 3 cubs.

We would go on 2 drives a day in the reserve to track the animals which allowed us to get very close to them.

The operator was a good organisation to go Africa with. They are were well organised and looked after everyone on the trip.
 
7 
Client: Tess Hill - from United States
Trip: Wildlife conservation expedition in South Africa
Rating:
rating 10/10
Comment: What an amazing experience this has been! Each day here at the base is a gift, although the base is rustic and has no electricity or hot water. I found that didn’t matter. The game drives are the primary focus of each day, some days are more fruitful than others but in time the rewards are huge with animal sightings. So far I have over 1600 photos to sort through when I get home.

A few of my favourite encounters include a visual of Zero, the male lion, with his zebra kill. Him and the kill were lying side by side facing opposite directions, the zebra head was still in tact so it looked as though they were napping together!

I went weeks seeing only hippo eyes and noses sticking out of the water and then one evening we spotted a hippo making her way into the water and grunting at another hippo to keep it away from the baby.

Also saw a herd of elephants playing together in a huge mud bath. So many memories, so little paper!

Community days are incredible! It’s very gratifying to spend time with the local school children. One day we taught them computer skills and although they don’t speak English they learned their tasks and loved doing it. On our second community outing we had a number of activities for the children to participate in. Mine was a spoon and marble race. The kids were so excited and had a blast. One group, team name hippos, completely surrounded me giving me hugs from all sides, one girl even tickled me. I will cherish that memory for a lifetime.

I am so thankful I had the opportunity to participate in this wonderful adventure. They are a phenomenal organisation.

 
 
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